9-letter words containing e, m, n, d
- codenames — Plural form of codename.
- come down — If the cost, level, or amount of something comes down, it becomes less than it was before.
- comedians — Plural form of comedian.
- comedones — a thickened secretion plugging a duct of the skin, especially of a sebaceous gland; blackhead.
- comedowns — Plural form of comedown.
- comingled — Simple past tense and past participle of comingle.
- commanded — to direct with specific authority or prerogative; order: The captain commanded his men to attack.
- commander — A commander is an officer in charge of a military operation or organization.
- commenced — Simple past tense and past participle of commence.
- commendam — the temporary holding of an ecclesiastical benefice
- commended — to present, mention, or praise as worthy of confidence, notice, kindness, etc.; recommend: to commend a friend to another; to commend an applicant for employment.
- commender — a person who commends
- commented — a remark, observation, or criticism: a comment about the weather.
- compander — a system for improving the signal-to-noise ratio of a signal at a transmitter or recorder by first compressing the volume range of the signal and then restoring it to its original amplitude level at the receiving or reproducing apparatus
- companied — Simple past tense and past participle of company.
- compendia — a brief treatment or account of a subject, especially an extensive subject; concise treatise: a compendium of medicine.
- comprendo — (slang) do you understand?.
- condemned — A condemned man or woman is going to be executed.
- condemner — to express an unfavorable or adverse judgment on; indicate strong disapproval of; censure.
- condemnor — a government or private party with the power to acquire private property for public use
- condiment — A condiment is a substance such as salt, pepper, or mustard that you add to food when you eat it in order to improve the flavour.
- confirmed — You use confirmed to describe someone who has a particular habit or belief that they are very unlikely to change.
- conformed — to act in accordance or harmony; comply (usually followed by to): to conform to rules.
- contemned — to treat or regard with disdain, scorn, or contempt.
- credendum — an article of faith
- crimsoned — Simple past tense and past participle of crimson.
- ctenidium — one of the comblike respiratory gills of molluscs
- cyanamide — a white or colourless crystalline soluble weak dibasic acid, which can be hydrolysed to urea. Formula: H2NCN
- d-s meson — a positively charged meson having a mass 3852 times that of the electron and a mean lifetime of approximately 4.7 X 10 -13 seconds.
- daemonian — demonian.
- daemonize — Demonize.
- damascene — to ornament (metal, esp steel) by etching or by inlaying, usually with gold or silver
- damaskeen — Alternative form of damascene.
- damn near — People use damn near to emphasize that what they are saying is not actually true, but is very close to being true.
- damn well — the damned, those condemned to suffer eternal punishment.
- damnedest — If you say that something is the damnedest thing, you are emphasizing that it is surprising or odd.
- damnified — Simple past tense and past participle of damnify.
- damoclean — a flatterer who, having extolled the happiness of Dionysius, tyrant of Syracuse, was seated at a banquet with a sword suspended over his head by a single hair to show him the perilous nature of that happiness.
- dampening — to make damp; moisten: to dampen a sponge.
- damyankee — (in the southern U.S.) a person native to the northern states of the U.S., especially one who is disliked or regarded with suspicion.
- dangerman — (sports, British) A player on an opposing side who poses a significant threat.
- de molina — Tirso (ˈtirso). Pen name of Gabriel Téllez. ?1571–1648, Spanish dramatist; author of the first dramatic treatment of the Don Juan legend El Burlador de Sevilla (1630)
- de morgan — Augustus, 1806–71, English mathematician and logician.
- de-mining — the process of removing landmines
- deaminase — an enzyme that breaks down and takes out the amino group from amino compounds
- deaminate — to remove one or more amino groups from (a molecule)
- deaminize — deaminate
- deathsman — an executioner
- debarment — to shut out or exclude from a place or condition: to debar all those who are not members.
- decameron — a collection of a hundred tales by Boccaccio (published 1353), presented as stories told by a group of Florentines to while away ten days during a plague